University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
School of Information and Library Science

INLS 500, Human Information Interactions, Fall 2015

Additional Readings of Interest

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Other class pages: Syllabus / Schedule / Assignments / Sakai site


Please note: Unless otherwise indicated, the annotations below each article are the insights of Barbara Wildemuth, taken from her Spring INLS500 class site. I've kept them intact so that you may benefit from them also.

INTRODUCTION / BASIC CONCEPTS

1: Trends in human information interaction research

2:Theoretical perspectives and basic concepts

3: Cognitive approaches to information behaviors

4: Alternatives: Affective and physical approaches


INFORMATION NEEDS

5: Experiencing an information need

6: Expressing information needs

7: Studying/analyzing information needs


INFORMATION SEEKING

8: Selection of information sources

9: Interactive information retrieval as part of the information seeking process

10: Assessment of information quality/value

11: Relevance judgments


INFORMATION USE

12: Ways of using information

13: Re-using and re-finding information

13: Information poverty and information overload


THE IMPACT OF CONTEXT ON INFORMATION SEEKING AND USE

14-15:Domain, disciplinary, and organizational context

16: Everyday life information seeking

17: Incidental information acquisition; Browsing and serendipity

18: Collaborative search and delegated/imposed queries


INTERMEDIATION AND DIS-INTERMEDIATION IN INFORMATION SEEKING

19: Human intermediaries: Reference and help desk services

20: Information retrieval systems as intermediaries

21: Social intermediation: Recommender systems, social Q&A, etc.


SCHOLARLY COMMUNICATION

22: Scholarly work and the role of scholarly communication

23: Metrics of scholarly productivity

24: The future of scholarly communication

25: The invisible college: discovery and representation; Diffusion theory and how it applies to the diffusion of information and information technologies

26: Scholarly publishing as an industry: Traditional and open access models; Intellectual property issues


COURSE WRAP-UP

27: Course wrap-up and summary


Creative Commons LicenseThis INLS 500 website, UNC-CH, 2014, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License, and benefitted from input received from Barbara Wildemuth, Deborah Barreau, Laura Sheble, Earl Bailey, Ruth Palmquist, and Kaitlin Costello. Address all comments and questions to Kathy Brennan at kbrennan@unc.edu. This page was last modified on August 18, 2015, by Kathy Brennan.